Imbalanced Coagulation in the Airway of Type-2 High Asthma with Comorbid Obesity.
Abstract
Asthma is a common, chronic airway inflammatory disease marked by airway hyperresponsiveness,
inflammation, and remodeling. Asthma incidence has increased rapidly in the past few
decades and recent multicenter analyses have revealed several unique asthma endotypes.
Of these, type-2 high asthma with comorbid obesity presents a unique clinical challenge
marked by increased resistance to standard therapies and exacerbated disease development.
The extrinsic coagulation pathway plays a significant role in both type-2 high asthma
and obesity. The type-2 high asthma airway is marked by increased procoagulant potential,
which is readily activated following damage to airway tissue. In this review, we summarize
the current understanding of the role the extrinsic coagulation pathway plays in the
airway of type-2 high asthma with comorbid obesity. We propose that asthma control
is worsened in obesity as a result of a systemic and local airway shift towards a
procoagulant and anti-fibrinolytic environment. Lastly, we hypothesize bariatric surgery
as a treatment for improved asthma management in type-2 high asthma with comorbid
obesity, facilitated by normalization of systemic procoagulant and pro-inflammatory
mediators. A better understanding of attenuated coagulation parameters in the airway
following bariatric surgery will advance our knowledge of biomolecular pathways driving
asthma pathobiology in patients with obesity.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25424Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.2147/jaa.s318017Publication Info
Womble, Jack T; McQuade, Victoria L; Ihrie, Mark D; & Ingram, Jennifer L (2021). Imbalanced Coagulation in the Airway of Type-2 High Asthma with Comorbid Obesity.
Journal of asthma and allergy, 14. pp. 967-980. 10.2147/jaa.s318017. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25424.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Jennifer Leigh Ingram
Associate Professor in Medicine
Dr. Ingram's research interests focus on the study of airway remodeling in human asthma.
Proliferation, migration, and invasion of airway fibroblasts are key features of airway
remodeling that contribute to diminished lung function over time. Dr. Ingram uses
molecular biology approaches to define the effects of interleukin-13 (IL-13), a cytokine
abundantly produced in the asthmatic airway, in the human airway fibroblast. She has
identified important regulatory functions of several proteins

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